M Tariq Khan

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Pankaj
Jaiswal and M Tariq Khan, Hindustan Times, Lucknow

Updated: Nov 06, 2016 01:37 IST

Uttar
Pradesh chief minister Akhilesh Yadav with party state president Shivpal Yadav
and RJD chief Lalu Prasad in Lucknow on Saturday. (PTI Photo)

Chief minister
Akhilesh Yadav and his uncle Shivpal traded angry barbs in public on Saturday
as the family feud in Uttar Pradesh’s ruling family marred by 25th
year celebrations of the Samajwadi Party.

Former Bihar chief
minister and Rashtriya Janata Dal leader Lalu Prasad had to intervene to try
and pacify Akhilesh and Shivpal, both of whom dropped the bonhomie they had
displayed moments earlier to tear into each other.

Amid the angry
exchanges, there was no decision on the grand alliance the SP is pushing for
with other non-BJP parties, although several erstwhile Janata Parivaar leaders
did attend the function as a mark of solidarity. BSP chief Mayawati, however,
mocked the alliance attempt at a press conference in Delhi in the evening.

She said the move
was a reflection of the SP “already accepting defeat” before next year’s
assembly polls. Former prime minister HD Deve Gowda also batted for a third
front under SP patriarch Mulayam Singh Yadav for the 2019 general elections.
Mulayam, however, did not speak on the issue.

But before
Mulayam’s address, the spotlight was firmly on Shivpal’s tirade and Akhilesh’s
response.

“How much more will
you humiliate me?...Sack me, insult me but I have also struggled and done a
good job in the departments that were given to me,” Shivpal said in front of
thousands of shocked supporters who had trooped into the sprawling Janeshwar
Mishra Park for the silver jubilee celebrations.

“I do not want to
be CM. I am willing to make any number of sacrifices but I will not tolerate
those who insult ‘netaji’ (Mulayam Singh Yadav),” he said, apparently referring
to several youth leaders who had protested Akhilesh’s removal as the SP’s state
president by the party patriarch. The youth leaders close to Akhilesh were
later expelled by Shivpal.

It had led to
several tit-for-tat sackings by Akhilesh and Shivpal, deepening the crisis in
the party. The party was hoping to send out a message that all was well in the
party and family during the celebrations. And before Shivpal spoke, Akhilesh
had touched his and Mulayam’s feet, drawing raucous cheers from party workers.

But when his turn
to speak came, Akhilesh hit back without naming his uncle.

“Kuch log sunege to
zaroor, magar sab bigar jaane ke baad (Some people would make amends but then
the damage would have been done)…Lohiaji (Ram Manohar Lohia) said he would be
heard but only after his death. Same way, some people would never understand,”
the chief minister said.

“I do not want
anyone to prove his credentials. I am also prepared for any test but I do not
want to reply to all the issues that have been raised here.”

The war of words
between the warring ‘chacha-bhatija’ came two days after an apparent show of
unity by Mulayam, Shivpal and Akhilesh at the flagging-off of Akhilesh’s
statewide yatra.

“You have given me
a sword but no authority to use it,” Akhilesh said, referring to a rapier
presented by Gayatri Prasad Prajapati, who he had sacked over graft allegations
but later reinducted on Mulayam’s insistence.

Mulayam, who spoke
last, skirted the family feud but did ask his chief minister-son to pay heed to
what senior leaders have said.

He thanked leaders
of the RJD, RLD and JD (U) leaders for attending the event but did not clear
the air on the party’s chief ministerial candidate.

MP Amar Singh,
whose inclusion in the SP was protested by Akhilesh, did not attend the event.

Lalu Prasad gave
the finishing touches with his rustic humour. “Journalists ask me about the
fight in the Samajwadi family. I told them that since nobody can fight us we
fight among ourselves,” he said.